How to create midnight datetime

Midnight is the first one – It’s the very first second of the day, not the last.

var todayDateTime = DateTime.Today;
var Midnight = todayDateTime.AddSeconds(-1);
//Here are the results
Console.WriteLine($"Today {todayDateTime.ToString()}, Mid night {Midnight.ToString()}");

The output is this;

Today 10/8/2021 12:00:00 AM, Mid night 10/7/2021 11:59:59 PM

Dapper – ORM example list

I am using EF for most of my ORM and data access. Recently I have tries Dapper and started liking it because of its simplicity and small footprint. Here is a list of example;

Using Dapper to fill a dataset;

Dapper returns a IDataReader when we use the ExecuteReaderAsync method. More information on this addition can be found here and here.

Use Nuget package to add Dapper. Add this to your Main class for quick demo;

static IDbConnection dbConn = new SqlConnection(ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["SqlServerConnString"].ConnectionString);

Here you go with DataSet example using Dapper;

public async Task<DataSet> GetUserInformationOnUserId(int UserId)
{
    var storedprocedure = "usp_getUserInformation";
    var param = new DynamicParameters();
    param.Add("@userId", UserId);
    var list = await SqlMapper.ExecuteReaderAsync(dbConn, storedprocedure, param, commandType: CommandType.StoredProcedure);
    var dataset = ConvertDataReaderToDataSet(list);
    return dataset;
}

Here is conversion to dataset method;

public DataSet ConvertDataReaderToDataSet(IDataReader data)
{
    DataSet ds = new DataSet();
    int i = 0;
    while (!data.IsClosed)
    {
        ds.Tables.Add("Table" + (i + 1));
        ds.EnforceConstraints = false;
        ds.Tables[i].Load(data);
        i++;
    }                    
    return ds;
}

How to map class names to class properties with dapper

Manually map column name with class properties

Does Dapper supports .NET DataSets

Store and Read Objects from Session in ASP.NET Core

Here you go;

In your Startup.cs, under the Configure method, add the following line:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
app.UseSession();
}

And under the ConfigureServices method, add the following line:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
  //Added for session state
  services.AddDistributedMemoryCache();

  services.AddSession(options =>
  {
  options.IdleTimeout = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(10);               
  });
}

The simple method to store and read data from session is;

# In a class;
Session.SetString("Email", "foo.com"); //store data
Session.GetString("Email"); //read data

# In Razor pages
@using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http; 
string CustomerEmail = String.Empty;
@if (Context.Session.GetString("Email") != null)
 {
     CustomerEmail = Context.Session.GetString("Email").ToString();
 }
}

# You can use it in Razor markup 
<ul class="navbar-nav mr-auto float-right">
   <li class="nav-item">
      <span class="navbar-text text-light">Hello @CustomerEmail</span>
   </li>

</ul>

In order to store complex objects in your session in .NET Core, follow the following steps:

Create a model class of your object type (in your case EmployeeDetails):

public class EmployeeDetails
{
    public string EmployeeId { get; set; }
    public string DesignationId { get; set; }
}

Then create a SessionExtension helper to set and retrieve your complex object as JSON:

public static class SessionExtensions
{
  public static void SetObjectAsJson(this ISession session, string key, object value)
   {
     session.SetString(key, JsonConvert.SerializeObject(value));
   }

   public static T GetObjectFromJson<T>(this ISession session, string key)
   {
     var value = session.GetString(key);
     return value == null ? default(T) : JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(value);
   }
}

Then finally set the complex object in your session as:

var employee = new EmployeeDetails();
employee.EmployeeId = "1";
employee.DesignationId = "2";

HttpContext.Session.SetObjectAsJson("EmployeeDetails", employee);

To retrieve your complex object in your session:

var employeeDetails = HttpContext.Session.GetObjectFromJson<EmployeeDetails>("EmployeeDetails");
int employeeID = Convert.ToInt32(employeeDetails.EmployeeId);
int designationID= Convert.ToInt32(employeeDetails.DesignationId);

My session was not working. it turns out that it relates to GDPR issues. Three fixes;

FIX-I

The first fix is to provide user a login page and let him accept cookies policy.

If you don’t provide a login page and still want to configure sessions in ASP.NET Core, you need these two fixes in Startup.cs file;

Fix-II Startup.cs file ConfigureServices method. Add this line;

 services.AddSession(options =>
 {
    options.Cookie.IsEssential = true;
 });

Fix-III Startup.cs file Configure method, comment this line;

//app.UseCookiePolicy();

The most common fix is FIX-I. For testing I choose Fix-II and session started working.

Sources

https://andrewlock.net/session-state-gdpr-and-non-essential-cookies/

Dataset and Data Tables (a refresher)

Dataset is an in-memory representation of a database relationship. Data Tables are individual tables that can be joined with Data relation objects.

Let’s go through an example of a tenant and his/her maintenance request;

Create a Dataset;

//create dataset
DataSet serviceRequest = new DataSet();

Create tenant table

//create tenant table
DataTable tenant = new DataTable();
tenant.Clear();
//add columns
tenant.TableName = "tenant";
tenant.Columns.Add("tenantID");
tenant.Columns.Add("Name");
tenant.Columns.Add("AptNumber");
//add rows
DataRow rowT = tenant.NewRow();
rowT["tenantID"] = "A1";
rowT["Name"] = "khan";
rowT["AptNumber"] = "1";
tenant.Rows.Add(rowT);

//Add this table to data set
serviceRequest.Tables.Add(tenant);

Create request table

//create request table
DataTable request = new DataTable();
request.Clear();
//add columns
request.TableName = "request";
request.Columns.Add("requestID");
request.Columns.Add("tenantID");
request.Columns.Add("description");
//add rows
DataRow rowR = request.NewRow();
rowR["requestID"] = "1";
rowR["tenantID"] = "A1";
rowR["description"] = "air conditioner does not work";
request.Rows.Add(rowR);
//add this table to data set
serviceRequest.Tables.Add(request);

Create relationship

//create relationship
DataRelation relation;
DataColumn tenantColumn = serviceRequest.Tables["tenant"].Columns["tenantID"];
DataColumn requestColumn = serviceRequest.Tables["request"].Columns["tenantID"];
relation = new DataRelation("relation", tenantColumn, requestColumn);
//assign relation
serviceRequest.Relations.Add(relation);

Create LINQ query to read data;

//simple LINQ query
var maintenanceData = (from x in serviceRequest.Tables["tenant"].AsEnumerable()
join y in serviceRequest.Tables["request"].AsEnumerable()
on x.Field<string>("tenantID") equals y.Field<string>("tenantID")
select new
   {
       TenantID = x.Field<string>("tenantID"),
       RequestID = y.Field<string>("requestID"),
       Description = y.Field<string>("description")
   }).ToList();

Here is the output of this LINQ query;

If we are going to add a new column in request table, for example AllowToEnterApt. We can use foreach loop to update the values in this column;

serviceRequest.Tables["request"].Columns.Add("AllowToEnterApt");
foreach (DataRow row in serviceRequest.Tables["request"].Rows)
{
     row["AllowToEnterApt"] = 1;
}

Remove single quote from strings

I would like to remove single quote from beginning and end of this string;

string tabName = "'i# milestones$'";
string outputTabName = tabName.Trim(new char[]{(char)39});

Where (char)39 represents ', and the .Trim() will remove the first and last ' from the string; You can try like this as well:

string outputTabName = tabName.Trim('\'');